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Hayley Fiedler, seen here last spring, is off to a 4-0 start with the Coupeville 8th grade SWISH basketball squad. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Can’t be stopped. Won’t be denied.

Playing two very different types of ballgames Saturday, the Coupeville 8th grade SWISH girls basketball team responded the only way it knows – by winning.

After overcoming a tough South Whidbey squad, escaping with a hard-fought, come-from-behind 28-25 win, the Wolves drilled far-less-competitive Orcas Island, using a withering defense to romp to a 22-9 victory.

The doubleheader sweep, coming on the road at Mount Vernon, lifts Coupeville to 4-0 at the halfway point of the Skagit County Parks and Rec League regular season.

The Wolves have a single game on both Nov. 24 and Dec. 1, each against teams they have previously beaten, then close with a doubleheader Dec. 8.

The league’s postseason tourney is set for Dec. 15.

With two games on the schedule Saturday, Coupeville got its big test out of the way early.

South Whidbey, led by sweet-shooting gunner Madison Knauer, who banged home four three-balls on her way to a game-high 16 points, jumped out to an early lead.

Down by four at the first break, the Wolves responded with an 8-3 run in the second quarter.

Shutting down the Falcon shooters, then pounding the ball inside to Carolyn Lhamon, who knocked down two big buckets, Coupeville reclaimed the lead and control of the game.

What the Wolves couldn’t do was pull away, as a 14-13 halftime lead turned into a 23-22 advantage after a back-and-fourth third quarter.

Coupeville finally put the hammer down in the fourth, thanks to buckets from Alita Blouin and Nezi Keiper, a free-throw from Blouin and another burst of stifling defense.

Lhamon paced the Wolves with eight points and six rebounds, while Blouin (7), Keiper (6), Maddie Georges (4), Gwen Gustafson (2), and Savina Wells (1) also scored.

Keiper led Coupeville on the boards, snagging eight caroms, with Georges glomming on to seven and Wells pulling down four.

The nightcap was much more of a one-sided affair, as the Wolves sprinted out to an 8-2 lead after one quarter, then stretched it to a 14-5 bulge at the half before coasting home.

Wells, a quicksilver 6th grader playing two grades up, tossed in a team-high six points and reeled in five rebounds.

Georges, Blouin and Lhamon added four points apiece, while Lauren Marrs and Keiper both dropped in a bucket.

Lhamon, Georges and Keiper tied for top honors with six rebounds each, and spark-plugs Hayley Fiedler (4) and Ryanne Knoblich (3) helped clean the glass.

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   Scout Smith had a pair of singles Saturday as Coupeville clashed with high-flying Forks in a doubleheader. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

This is not going to go the way you think.

Luke Skywalker’s words of wisdom in “The Last Jedi” were likely echoing around Coupeville Saturday, though, with all the wind, everyone could be forgiven for not hearing them.

On a day when the prairie was lashed by rolling, dirt-flinging, sustained winds that sliced through the souls of even the most die-hard of fans, the Wolf softball squad came back to Earth.

The CHS sluggers, coming off of a romp against Meridian, entered Saturday with a superb 6-1 record.

That record has now taken a ding or two, courtesy a very-impressive Forks team.

A Spartans unit that plays together as both a high school team and a travel ball squad showed what year-round commitment can inspire, as they drilled the Wolves 12-0 and 10-0 to sweep a doubleheader no one was sure would be played in the first place.

The non-conference losses drop Coupeville to 6-3, and its players, who managed just five hits on the day while battling flame-throwing Spartans and Mother Nature, will have some time to reflect on what went wrong.

CHS is off until next Saturday, Apr. 14, when it travels to Friday Harbor.

As he surveyed the damage, Wolf coach Kevin McGranahan was clear-eyed and committed to making sure his players bounce back quickly and efficiently.

“Long story short, Forks hit the ball and we didn’t,” he said. “We ran into a very good team today and we have some things to work on.”

The Spartans (7-2), who compete in the brutal Evergreen League, where they clash with fellow 1A powerhouses like Montesano, Elma and Hoquiam, are GOOD.

And yes, that word was meant to be all caps.

Forks, one through nine, hits with precision and power, it rarely make mistakes in the field and it boasts five pitchers with top-level stuff.

So, even though Wolf hurlers Katrina McGranahan and Scout Smith weren’t off by much Saturday, to beat the Spartans you would have to be close to flawless.

And Coupeville, whether bothered by the wind, the precision of their visitors, or a little jet lag from playing five games in six days, was not flawless on this day.

Game 1:

Katrina McGranahan came out all guns blazing, whiffing the side in the first, en route to nine K’s in the game.

But then things fell apart for a bit in the second, as Forks used four hits, including one greatly helped by the wind, which caused a routine fly ball to madly curve away from a CHS fielder at the last second, to bust things open.

Down 4-0 and unable to muster much offense, the Wolves went 11 batters into the game before they got their first runner aboard.

That was Smith, who ripped a one-out single to straight-away center in the fourth.

When the wind died (for at least six seconds) and McGranahan immediately followed with her own base-knock to right, the hints of a rally begin to emerge.

Only to be promptly smashed, as Forks cut down the lead runner on a grounder off the bat of Sarah Wright, then escaped the inning with a strikeout.

The game got away from CHS after that, with the Spartans plating three in the fifth (including a long two-run home-run) and five more in the sixth to enact the mercy rule.

Smith added a second single, while freshman Mollie Bailey toasted a single to center to cap Coupeville’s limited four-hit attack.

Game 2:

If the offense was blunted in the opener, it was DOA the second time around, with a Lauren Rose single and a Bailey walk accounting for the only Wolf base-runners.

Forks methodically picked away, scoring runs in small clumps, with the only bright spot for Coupeville coming from its defense.

Emma Mathusek nailed a runner coming in to third with a throw from left, Rose devoured everything which came her way in the middle of the infield and CHS turned a tricky double-play to stuff a rally.

The play of the game came from McGranahan, who was manning shortstop with Smith in the pitcher’s circle.

While Forks kept 99% of their hits on the ground Saturday, one Spartan lofted a ball high into the swirling madness in the first inning.

Breaking from short, McGranahan had to fight the wind, which caused the ball to suddenly reverse course, and an ump who couldn’t seem to get out of her way as she charged in, veered, then dove face-first.

Spearing the ball in the very tip of her glove, she snagged the orb as it dropped like an anvil, then held on through the collision with the ground, earning easily the biggest cheer of the afternoon.

Heck, even the ump who made her job harder was smiling about the play afterwards – a small victory on a rough and tumble day.

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   Scout Smith sizzled at the plate, on defense and in the pitcher’s circle Monday as CHS softball swept a doubleheader from Blaine. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

This wasn’t one player having a good day. Or two, or even three.

This was a team, from top to bottom, firing on all cylinders and beating the living snot out of their foes in one fiery, day-long assault on the scoreboard.

By the time the red-hot Coupeville High School softball sluggers were done Monday, they had rocked Blaine pitching for 29 hits, including four doubles, two triples and a home run to straight-away center field.

So it should come as little surprise that the Wolves returned from the Canadian border bearing not one, but two wins, having swept the Borderites 12-1 and 20-6.

The non-conference victories, coming against a large 2A school, stretches Coupeville’s win streak to three games and lifts its record to 5-1.

After a couple of days to enjoy spring break, the Wolves play three home games in two days, hosting Meridian Friday and Forks Saturday. The second of those match-ups will be another doubleheader.

If CHS comes out swinging like it did against Blaine, the games will be over quickly, though it may not be painless for their opponents.

Coupeville scored in 12 of 13 innings at Blaine, failing to notch at least one run in just the top of the third in game #2.

Even then, they came within an inch of doing so, their run-scoring dream only denied when Blaine’s pitcher made a fairly spectacular snag on a scorching liner off the bat of Sarah Wright.

Mostly a wild defensive move, a bid to save her rib cage from being tattooed by the incoming laser, it earned well-deserved cheers from both teams.

Pretty much every other applause-worthy moment on the afternoon came courtesy of a Coupeville player, as the Wolves mashed from the top of the lineup to the bottom.

Toss in a nearly error-free defense, including a couple of great throws on the move from freshman third-baseman Chelsea Prescott and a “I said, sit down!” throw from Wright to nail a would-be base stealer, and CHS hurlers Katrina McGranahan and Scout Smith just had to be consistent, not inspired.

Not that the duo listened, as they took turns keeping the Blaine hitters off balance and both had stretches where they retired Borderites at a steady clip.

So, a very satisfying, if long, day for CHS coach Kevin McGranahan.

“We came off the bus ready to go; the whole offense just chipped away and kept fighting,” he said. “Everybody got a lot of solid playing time and we gained a lot of experience for our younger players against a big 2A school.

“This is how we build our program and these girls are all buying into the program and giving everything they have every game,” McGranahan added. “Game to game there are stars of the game, but really, this is a TEAM, and they all play for each other. Outstanding day for the Wolves!!”

Game #1:

Using speed and base-running guile to their advantage, the Wolves steadily built a lead, scoring in every inning and pushing the game into 10-run rule territory after the sixth inning.

Early RBI’s from Katrina McGranahan and Nicole Laxton staked CHS to a 2-0 lead, then Wright and Veronica Crownover bashed back-to-back run-producing base-knocks in the third to help their team begin to pull away.

Coupeville really surged in the fourth, when Laxton and Mackenzie Davis came around to score on a two-run single by Lauren Rose.

Davis beat the throw to home by a millisecond, dipping to get below the tag at just the right moment.

Hope Lodell cranked a wicked liner to center field to spur a rally in the fifth, and the Wolves came within an out of pulling off the shutout before Blaine scored its solitary run.

The bottom of the sixth also included some major Katrina McGranahan mojo, as she recorded her seventh and eighth strikeouts, then accidentally exploded an inside pitch off a Borderite batter’s hip.

Ball hit bone with the kind of sound normally reserved for runaway semi trucks hitting grocery carts full of glass bottles, causing even the toughest softball lifers to flinch and mutter under their breath, “Dang! She’s probably dead!!”

She wasn’t, thankfully, and even stayed in the game, after much hobbling around while wailing “Take me now, sweet Jesus!”

Katrina McGranahan, among the classiest of all classy athletes, profusely apologized to her inadvertent bulls-eye, even while knowing, deep in the back of her brain, that not a single Blaine hitter would even remotely crowd the plate the rest of the season.

Game #2:

Showing some chippiness, the Borderites returned from the between-games snack break ready to do some damage, and actually carried a 5-3 lead into the fifth inning.

Coupeville mixed up its lineup a bit, with freshmen Coral Caveness and Mollie Bailey getting major playing time and Smith coming on to replace McGranahan in the pitcher’s circle in the third.

After scraping out a run in both the first and second, thanks largely to hits from Smith and Prescott, CHS briefly stalled out.

Falling behind 5-2, the Wolves chipped back with a run in the fourth, courtesy an RBI single into the gap from Smith, then turned the volume to 11 in the fifth.

Seven of the first eight CHS hitters reached base in the inning, with Prescott lashing a two-run triple to tie the game, before Crownover poked an RBI single over the bag at first to put the Wolves back ahead for good.

RBI’s from Laxton and Smith, packaged around Emma Mathusek being drilled (in the toe, not the hip, and she appreciates it) stretched the lead to 9-5, and then it was time to get medieval.

With two on and two away, Wright hefted her bat like Thor wielding his hammer and sauntered to the plate.

At that exact moment, a particularly cold gust of wind surprise-attacked from behind the bleachers, ripping through the souls (and across the exposed legs) of any fans dumb enough to be wearing shorts.

The goosebumps hadn’t even settled, though, when Coupeville’s catcher turned on a pitch and tore the stitching off the ball.

By the time the hapless orb dropped out of sight, landing on the other side of the center field fence, Wright was halfway to second, and she only slowed down when her teammates charged out of the dugout, ready to gang-tackle her as the ump twirled his hand to signal a three-run dagger of a long-ball.

Her home run marked the end of Wright’s day, as Bailey, who had already taken over her catching duties several innings earlier, also took her spot in the hitting order after that.

Bailey walked during a seven-run seventh, a final Wolf explosion which included RBI singles from Mathusek and Crownover and a gut-check slide into home from Laxton.

Arriving at the same moment as an incoming ball, the Wolf junior collided with the Blaine catcher and took the brunt of the blow.

While it obviously hurt, she was safe, however, and limped back to the bench to be healed by her teammate’s extended cheers.

By the time the stats were totaled up, Crownover came out as the Hit Queen, rattling off five base-knocks on the day, including a double.

Smith and Prescott had four hits apiece, with Lodell, Wright and Caveness each collecting three.

Mathusek (2), Laxton (2), Rose (1), Davis (1) and Katrina McGranahan (1) rounded out the attack.

Seven of those 29 hits were of the extra-base variety, with Wright (2B, HR), Lodell (2B, 3B), Prescott (3B), Crownover (2B) and Katrina McGranahan (2B) all making the big turn at first and heading off to extended glory.

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   Jaschon Baumann pulled off “the win of the season” to keep Coupeville’s hopes of repeating as league champs alive for an extra hour. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Coupeville High School boys tennis coach Ken Stange has been doing this gig for a long time — 25 seasons over 13 years — but Thursday afternoon he rode the roller-coaster of feelings in a way rarely seen.

One second, he was bouncing with joy, high-fiving his players as he sprinted by.

The next, he was hunched over, trying to mentally will his netters through every gut-wrenching point.

Flashes of irritation tempered by another explosion of fist-pumping ecstasy.

And, finally, hard-earned acceptance, as Coupeville’s run at a third-straight Olympic League title ended by the narrowest of margins.

Even then, though, a flush of pride on his cheeks as  the last two players on the court, young guns Zach Ginnings and Drake Borden, rallied to pull out a final win even after the day’s second team match, and the title, were lost.

“We did not go down easy!,” Stange softly muttered, and then he wryly smiled and went off to finally have some dinner after one of the longest, and most action-packed days, in CHS tennis history.

Thanks to an earlier match being rained out, the Wolves and visiting Klahowya played two matches in one day Thursday (using pro sets instead of the normal best two-of-three-sets format), and the stakes couldn’t have been higher.

Lose both, or split, and Coupeville’s two-year run as the big dog was over.

Sweep the day and, barring a complete collapse against league doormat Chimacum in the coming days and the Wolves would howl one more time.

With action hopping on four courts at once, both coaches juggling their lineups (and Stange giving his own impassioned version of a “Win one for the Gipper” speech at the start), things got wild.

In the opening match, junior Jaschon Baumann played his heart out at #3 singles, tipping the scales in favor of Coupeville and cinching a 4-3 win.

“The win of the day! The win of the year! The win of your life!!,” thundered a jubilant Stange as he came dangerously close to grabbing Baumann and carrying him over his head, Rocky-style, through the parking lot.

With that victory, the Wolves joined 2A North Kitsap, an undefeated juggernaut, as the only schools to knock off Klahowya in 12 matches this season.

It also ramped up the stakes on the day’s second match, and the two squads went at it in a pitched battle, as fans, including Coupeville football players stopping by after practice to root for their classmates, bounced from court to court.

In the end, Klahowya’s depth — it features last year’s fourth-place finisher at the state tourney and a pair of brothers who spent the past four years honing their tennis game in England — was too much.

A win at #2 doubles, which came down to a nerve-wracking tiebreaker, carried the day as the Eagles rebounded for their own 4-3 win.

With the split, KSS (4-1 in league play, 11-2 overall) recaptures the conference title it last won in 2014.

Coupeville, which sits at 2-2, 3-6, has four matches left, including two league tilts with Chimacum, then will host the conference tourney Oct. 21.

Complete Thursday results:

Match 1:

1st Singles — Tiger Johnson lost to Taylor Fite 8-0

2nd Singles — Nile Lockwood lost to Jacob Kraft 8-0

3rd Singles — Jaschon Baumann beat Drew Kraft 8-4

1st Doubles — William Nelson/Joey Lippo beat Morgan Seidel/William Stewart 8-0

2nd Doubles — Nick Etzell/Mason Grove lost to Joe Bowman/Nick Hytinen 8-6

3rd Doubles — Jakobi Baumann/Pedro Gamorra beat Parker Short/Carson Short 8-5

4th Doubles — Drake Borden/Zach Ginnings beat Dominic Westland/Cameron Johnson 8-4

 

Match 2:

1st Singles — T. Johnson lost to Fite 8-0

2nd Singles — Lockwood lost to J. Kraft 8-2

3rd Singles — Jas. Baumann lost to D. Kraft 8-1

1st Doubles — Lippo/Etzell lost to Seidel/Stewart 9-8(9-7)

2nd Doubles — Nelson/Grove beat Bowman/Hytinen 9-7

3rd Doubles — Jak. Baumann/Gamorra beat P. Short/C. Short 8-4

4th Doubles — Ginnings/Borden beat Westland/C. Johnson 8-6

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   Jake Pease had multiple hits, caught and made his high school pitching debut Saturday in a road doubleheader. (John Fisken photo)

“The short story is that we ran out of pitching, and our bats found leather when theirs found grass.”

Coupeville High School JV baseball coach Chris Smith had a short bench Saturday, but he still got his Wolves to battle valiantly through a doubleheader on sunny Vashon Island.

While the varsity squad was getting damp back on Whidbey, the Wolf JV played in a relative heat wave, holding the lead in both games before falling 6-4 and 14-5 to the Pirates.

The losses drop the young guns to 1-2 on the season.

“It was a long day and a grind on the field, which is what we like,” Smith said. “I was very proud of our pitchers, who knew they were going into this doubleheader with very little to no support in relief.

“Both Nick Etzell and Elliott Johnson should be commended on their strong pitching performances,” he added. “They both made valiant efforts and pitched a good game, maintaining a Coupeville lead into the 4th and 5th inning, respectively.”

Etzell went five innings in the opener, with Gavin Knoblich coming on to throw in relief, then Johnson teamed with Knoblich and first-time pitcher Jake Pease in the nightcap.

Coupeville notched a quick two runs in the top of the first in game one and held that lead until Vashon struck for five in the bottom of the fourth.

Not content to go down easily, the Wolves got two back in the sixth, but couldn’t quite catch up.

Game two might look like a rout if you just look at the score, but it was far from that.

With Johnson in command on the mound, CHS was on top 5-3 heading into the bottom of the fifth inning. Then Vashon struck, racking up 11 runs in a two-inning span to seal the deal.

Etzell and Pease led the way offensively for the Wolves, rapping out multiple hits, with Etzell scoring twice in both games.

“Our guys battled the whole way,” Smith said. “It was good baseball, even better than the score reflected.

“Everyone demonstrated a never-say-die attitude and we went down swinging,” he added. “Well, not literally; our last out of the second game was a strikeout looking, but you get my point.”

Coupeville played tough defense all game, with several plays bringing a smile to Smith’s face.

The Wolves pulled off a slick double play (Etzell to Pease to Kyle Rockwell) in game one, and twice gunned down runners at the plate in game two.

On both those plays, Etzell was the cutoff man and laid the ball perfectly in Cameron Dahl’s waiting glove behind the plate.

“We made some plays that demonstrated some defensive brilliance,” Smith said. “I love that!”

The hardball guru was also pleased with the hustle and effort he got from a trio of bench players — Johnny Carlson, Seth Weatherford and Gavin Straub.

“We got a lot of support and heart from our bench,” Smith said. “They stood ready in the dugout, waiting for their moment to shine and shine they did.”

Carlson “lost both of his cleats in separate strides as he stormed down the left field line after a double,” actually running out of his shoes.

Weatherford “made a huge out in right catching a hard line drive that he charged in to gobble up” and Straub “put the bat on the ball in both of his AB’s and did everything humanly possible to reach safely.”

Ulrik Wells, Jacob Zettle, James Vidoni and Shane Losey rounded out the Wolf roster, with Wells smacking a single in game two.

While he wanted to come away with wins, Smith couldn’t fault his team’s effort or desire.

“In the end (assistant coach) Mike (Etzell) and I walked away bummed we couldn’t squeak out a win,” he said. “But content that we played “Baseball” and part of baseball is knowing how to deal with the disappointment.

“We will move on and work to get better,” Smith added. “I was proud of this team because they delivered on our expectations for them to “Play Hard, Play Smart, Play Together and Have Fun!

“At the end of the day that is all I really ask or expect!”

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